5.Chiefly US and Canadian a quantity of timber cut during a specific time or operation

6.Sport the spin of a cut ball

7.Cricket a stroke made with the bat in a roughly horizontal position

8.Films an immediate transition from one shot to the next, brought about by splicing the two shots together

9.Chem a fraction obtained in distillation, as in oil refining

10. the metal removed in a single pass of a machine tool

11.

a. the shape of the teeth of a file

b. their coarseness or fineness

12.Brit a stretch of water, esp a canal

13.make the cutGolf to better or equal the required score after two rounds in a strokeplay tournament, thus avoiding elimination from the final two rounds

14.miss the cutGolf to achieve a greater score after the first two rounds of a strokeplay tournament than that required to play in the remaining two rounds

Cut

a relief printing plate used for reproducing illustrations. Depending on the type of original being reproduced, either a linecut or halftone is made. Linecuts are made from an original consisting of lines, strokes, and solid backgrounds of uniform density (pen-and-ink drawings, engraved prints, sketches); halftones are made from an image with varying densities (photographs, watercolors, or oil paintings).

Cuts are made with wood, linoleum, zinc, brass, copper, or plastic. In making zinc cuts, which are the most widely used, the original is first photographed; using photomechanical methods, it is then transferred onto a zinc plate with a light-sensitive coating, after which the areas between the surfaces to be printed are deepened by chemical or electrochemical etching. Copper cuts are made by hand engraving or etching in a solution of ferric chloride. There is also a quick method, known as single-process etching, for making magnesium and zinc cuts with etching machines. Cuts are also made on electroengraving machines. One cut will print 40,000–50,000 copies.

To shear one side of an entry or a crosscut by digging out the coal from floor to roof with a pick.

(cell and molecular biology)

A double-strand incision in a duplex deoxyribonucleic acid molecule.

(nucleonics)

The fraction that is removed as product or advanced to the next separative element in an isotope separation process.

(textiles)

The number of needles per inch in the cylinder or needle bed in a knitting frame.

cut

1. Excavated material.

2. The void resulting from the excavation of material.

3. The depth to which material is to be excavated to bring the surface to a predetermined grade.

4. In the theater, a long slot across the stage floor for the introduction or removal of scenery.

cut

i. To switch off an aircraft engine.ii. To cut the gun. To close the throttle of an engine.iii. In air navigation, the intersection of two lines of position; this is the smaller angle between these two lines.

All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.